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rNew York Cif.r.?Xo house gown of the season is more attractive and charming than this one made in surplice style with the dainty chemisette. It would be effective and appropriate lade from any simple pretty wool aaterial such as cballie, cashmere, alatross and the like, but, in this intance, combines ring dotted challie, lile blue in color, with bandings of ale blue silk and a chemisette of icked muslin. The shirred shoulders od girdle make characteristic features pile the puffed sleeves, finished with tills, are eminently graceful and* atkctive, but the model Is an adaptable le and long full sleeves with roll-over pffs can be substituted whenever preferred. The foundation is a smoothly fitted I A L/I1E Iig on -wliicb the full fronts and : are arranged and which, together l the waist, is joined to the skirt, :h in turn is shirred over a foundayoke. ie quantity of material required for medium size is eleven and a half Is twenty-seven, ten and a hall s thirty-two or six yards forty-foui es wide with one-half yard eighinches wide for chemisett'? and and a half yards for banding. On Severe Line*. fair one is indulging herself to extent of a strawberry cheviot suit. The shade is neither light dark, though it fairly suggests ie. The cut is perfect and there It trimming save a row of stitchFor one who has a number of the red rig is a charming addiEed cloth coats will be very t for country wear. The younger ngent especially affects them foi Dg and the like. As for little , g red reefer is, indeed, a catclij ent. Br^to'Je OnTrn Faihlonablei I? bretelie gow:> seems to be gain avor marvelously. It is a verj iful fashion and should never bf> attempted by a stout woman stage-peasant appearance is no' ed to modern conditions. The le gown is a boon to mothers ol ng girls, especially if there an s of hor own to be remade foi lughters. A Dainty Waiit. agile-looking, but very dainty linvaist, with a beautifully cmbroid'ront hud a .voke of tiny tucks SifiSfc in groups of five. Between the groupn were narrow strips of fine Brussels net. The upper part of the sleeve was embroidered to match the front, the sleeve being finished with an elbow cuff made of groups of tucks and strios of the net. Cloth on Silk. As odd as it is dainty is a soft silk in a pastel cadet blue, the grown being ? * a - ?) 41 J ? strewn witn wmte aots. so iur it io only pretty. There Is more. The narrow panels of skirt, the quadruple bretelles on the waist and a four Inch band on the handkerchief wrap, as well as around the skirt, are all of cloth the exact shade of the delicate cadet blue ground of 1lie silk. Some Natty Umbrellas. The neatest umbrellas are the dark browns, reds and blues, which have woven into them some inconspicuous I pattern. It may be a mere dot or a j dash, or a narrow stripe effect carried I around in bands, but it is tasteful and j relieves the monotony of the dead j black rain protector. Silk Gauzei. Many of the new silk gauzes, In lovely Dresden designs, make charming gowns for dances and fetes. They are trimmed with many fluttering ribbons, lace frills and picturesque fichus m horthns Nine Gored Walking: Skirt. No fashionable material Is more satisfactory for warm weather -wear than mohair, inasmuch as it Is light of weight, sheds dust and easily can be kept clean, for all of which reasons it was selected for the making of this very graceful and attractive skirt, but the season nevertheless is a generous one and the model can be made adaptable to many other fabrics as well. Pongee, Rajah and the Burllngham silks are much in demand for immediate wear while after a bit linen will be having extended vogue, f#r all of which the design is admirable while It also can be utilized for the various suitings. As illustrated the trimming j is banding and handsome buttons, the MdY MdNTrtN j I i in e i ?aiii a ww? straps, which serve a practical end as ' well as an ornamental one, being held , in position by buttons which are small and flat. The skirt is cut in nine gores and is ' laid in groups ?f three backward-turning pleats, which are stitched with corticelli silk from the upper edges to ' the straps to give a tuck effect while below that point they are pressed to position. The fulness at the back is laid in inverted pleats that meet over the seam and beneath these pleats the closing is made. 1 The quantity of material required for : medium size is ten and a half yards : twenty-seven, six and a quarter yards ' forty-four or fifty-two inches wide when material has figure or nap; six and a half yards twenty-seven, five and a quarter yards forty-four or four yards fifty-two inches wide when ma/ i terial has neitb?" ??? "v - itLL .. "Tt. ? THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON RY BISHOP BURGESS. D. D. Subject: The Church's Foundation. Brooklyn. N. Y.?In the Church of the Messiah the Right Rev. Frederick Burgess, D. D., Bishop of Long Island, on Sunday preached from the text, Matthew xvi:13-20, and particularly the passage: "And whom say ye that I am? Simon Peter answered: Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living Cod. Jesus answered and said: Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona; flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which is in Heaven. I say also unto thee: Thou art Peter, and upon this rock will I build My church." He said: These words can be scarcely understood apart from their context. The author of the Bampton Lectures pointed out that Caesarea was the borderland of the Jew and the Gentile, and thus was a fitting place for proclaiming the divinity of Him who came to save, not one race, but all mankind. Later study of our Lord's life revealed the fact that He was at that time truly in exile. It becomes almost self-evident, as we read the Gospels, that our Lord was suffering A /ini.fiffi'^,11 onrl folt that TTlS TTfirlv was, to a certain extent, a failure. The cities of Capernaum and Corazin, where He had preached and labored, were all against Him: and you can all recall the sad farewell which He gave to those cities. In the Gospel of St. John we can see evidence that a large number of people who at first had believed in Jesus were gradually estranged from Him by His teaching and by His unpopularity. He had been forced to leave His native land and go into exile. The words which He spake to the Syrophoenecian women, "It is not meet to take the children's bread and give it to the dogs," shows the sadness, almost bitter sadness: and when He came to His own "His own received Him not." In one way and another, we can see how bitterly He felt and. while we have no real picture, yet, nevertheless. we can, in fancy, see Him. as we r-QOfi tho rjnenole \rlth W1k little hand. going ahead of them through those northern valleys; and we know that it was no figure of speech, but the truth, when He said: "The foxes have hcjes, and the birds of the air have nests; but the Son of Man hath not where to lay His head." Now this confession of Peter marks the end of this period of exile. From that time on He set His face toward Jerusalem. Almost immediately there followed the transfiguration on, probably, Mount Hermon, and then He started, with His twelve apostles, to Jerusalem to suffer and to die. Now this passage reveals deep truth. It reveals the foundation on which Christ built His church. But, as you unuersrana, we must nut lose siyut ui Ilis humanity. The heresy which sees in Christ an unreal man, one who cannot be touched by our sorrows, our joys or our disappointments, has always been condemned in the councils and by the creeds of the church. Our Lord could not have been truly man If He had not hungered and thirsted and been weary sometimes. He bad not sought for help if sometimes He had felt the depression of loneliness and disappointment, though only once did it find expression, namely, on the crosg when He said: "My God, My God. why hast Thou forsaken Mc-." This period of exile, ther.. was a period of depression. Men had deserted Him by thousands; the people whom He had cured and taught were all gone now. And perhaps He feared, as He asked His apostles that crucial question: "Whom do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?" If, however, He did fear, whatever He feared was dissipated by the perfect faith of Peter's clear, strong answer: "Thou art the Christ, the son of the living God." And one who has ever tried to do real work for humanity and to help forward the kingdom of God must have known something of this depression, and must also have known something of this joy when at least He had found one man who believed in Him and in His message and who was ready to stand out before the world and confess his faith. Our Lord, then, founded His church upon a man?upon Peter, if you will. He did not found it upon a doctrine, or a building, or an army, or a treasury. No, but on a warm, rugged human heart. He said to Peter: Thou art a rock, and on this rock I will build My church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." Those who want to see in this passage a long, liieraticai line, ever connecting itself with a bishopric, must, I suppose, be allowed to hug their delusion as long as they live. But a sane criticism will always reveal the fact that our Lord was asserting that lie would found His church upon loving human hearts, upon men who believed in Him, in honor and dishonor, through good report or evil report, in sickness and health, as well as in proverty and exile. Our Lord believed in men; He trusted them. It has been -well said of Him that indignation, even anger, were spoken of men, but to condemn, never. Man, as man, was worthy of respect. Now that has not been the attitude of the great writers and generals and leaders of mankind. Alexander, Caesar, regarded men as so many pawns to be moved about as they willed. "What are a million souls to me?" boasted Napoleon when he was taunted with the loss of an army; so in philosophy we find the same dis; crediting of men. But, Christ taught a different estimate of mankind to His apostles and St. Paul reverenced men, even wnen he saw their sins and rebuked them. The parable of the prodigal son and the epistle to the Romans have been contrasted, and it has been said of the one that it is tenderly and pathetically human as he rises above his rabbinical law to teach liiv; ueaui ui luc m/iu auu iii'iiea of the goodness of God. All through that epistle to the Romans there runs the burden of the glory of man's origin and man's destiny: "We are children of God. and if children of God, then heirs, joint heirs with Christ, if so be we suffer with Him." There is mnn's glorious heritage in that he is made in the image of God. So with all the apostles and true followers of Jesus throughout the world, they have always reverenced men. They have seen the greatness of men's capacity even when they have seen the evil as it is shown so in our great cities, which in some respects e^ual Sodom and Gomorrah. Beneath all the external they can see the power of the human heart. "Who is that common place looking fellow V" said a man to Abraham Lincoln. "Friend," replied the President, "the Lord prefers commonplace people, and that is the reason why he has made so many of thorn." Now, our Lord estimated men at their true worth. He knew their power, and He founded His church on men-K>n Peter and James and John and Thomas and Paul. As our be-, - A ? - Wrflh 1 loved collect expresses It: "Thou hart founded upon the apostles and prophets, Christ, Himself, being the head cornerstone." To that church you all belong. You have taken the step which announces that consciously you have come to your full conception of what that church is, and that you are members in it. Now, what Christ wants of you Is, not your money or your influence, but He wants your heart, your devotion, but He wants you to stand really, purely, bjmestly. truly, steadfastly for Him, He wants you to be built up, as St. Peter expresses it. "as lively stones" in His church. It has been said that to suppose that the Christian Church could have been founded by any save Jesus Christ would be as absurd as to suppose that Strasburg Cathedral had been formed through the centuries by the conflux of the dust of the streets. Now, it is into that church that you have come, and you are to become stones in the building. You are to grow strong by being true and earnest, and pure and temperate. Buttresses and arches and roofs are not more really the fruit of human architect's work than temperance and chastity and honesty are the fruits of the Divine Architect's love. "On this rock I win uuiia .uy ciiurcii. The Church of Jesus Christ will be stronger to-night ond stronger to-morrow. because you have been confirmed to-day. if you honestly keep the promises you have made to-night. After Revival?What? The remarkable religious movement which not long since arose in the West like a little cloud no bigger than a man's hand, is apparently spreading throughout Christendom. It has already assumed proportions which command attention from alii quarters and has won for it general recognition as "the revival." Every genuine Christian, at least, will be on the watch to make the utmost of Its best features and the least of its blemishes. It is alike imDossible that the latter can be essentially.divine, or that the former can be exclusively human. Here, as in all Christian "salvation," J it is imperative that there should be the distinct recognition of co-operation. For it is always true that God oan no more save man without himself than man can save himself without God. This principle, however, compels us not only to look with reverence for the Divine element in present events, but to consider carefully human issues in the future. Waves of strong emotion, be they ever so potent for good, cannot roll on without cessation. There is an ebb as well as flow to every tide. It is none too soon, therefore, to ask and answer such questions as these: Whither is this movement leading us? What will be left when its emotional force is spent? Will it prove a veritable Nile in its fruit-bearing deposits, or will it ebb away into Sahara-like sterility? All evangelical Christians doubtless hope that the utmost of the hiehest will abide. Yet is there ample room for most serious thought as to how this more or less transient impulse may not only be translated into something permanent but become the starting-point of a definitely higher conception of Christian doctrine and practice throughout all the churches. ?Frank Ballard, in London: Methodist Times. Tho Wnndtr of God. "He saw that there was no man, and wonders! that there wes no intercessor." Here is a needy world with Its cliiefest hope in what intercession may bring. Here is a God who declares that unlimited blessing may be gained for men through intercession. Here is yourself with some knowledge in your own experience of what intercession might mean. Yet God waits and wonders! The phrase is not too strong. Remember the missionaries who have gladly renounced all for the !/^ miff in rt n now llerht into deSDair JVJ \J M. ? ? .. ?o _ ing faces?but they spend little time In asking for the Light. Remember the pastors whose calling It is to minister?but they have renounced the highest and most efficient ministry. Remember the myriads who prate ceaselessly about the world's need of revival?but they talk little about it to Him who alone can give it. RememI ber what you say you believe, recall what you actually do?and cease to wonder that God wonders.?Pacific Baptist. I A Lesson From Beethoven. Henry Ward Beeclier once drew this illustration to show God's desire to have His people show forth His love for the world: "Beethoven, it is said, after he became deaf, would sit and play on an old worn-out harpsichord that had long been unfit for use, and suppose that he was playing matchless harmonies. The instrument was so poor that not one chord in five responded. Here was one that gave forth some sound, and there was another; but even they were out of harmony. And I sometimes think God plays on a poor harpsichord when He takes this world to evolve the melodies of Divine love, so few chords respond at all, and so utterly inadequate are those that do respond to illustrate this crowning attribute of the mind." God is In Circunmtances. - * 1 i-i-J n f { c Wa. It IS not uy regreiuug parable that true work Is done, but by making the best of what we are. It is not by complaining that we have not the right tools, but by using well the tools we have. What we are, and where we are, is God's providential arrangement?God's doing, though it may be man's misdoing; and the manly and wise way is to look your failures in the face and see what can be made out of them.?F. W. Robertson. "A Friend of His." "No, I dou't know jesus," responded a young city Arab to the abrupt question of a zealous, if not overtactful, street missionary. Then, with a sudden illumination of memory, he- added, "But I know a friend of His, and I like her." Some good woman, had done more than she knew, for the Gospel of Christ in the life of Ills friends is the Gospel that shall reach all nations. Dcfilrc For Obcdlenco. Obedience must be the struggle and desire of our life. Obedience, not hard aud forced, but ready, loving and spontaneous; the doing of duty, not merely that the duty may be done, but that < ?.? tn,il ?.i if rrtnv cana bio of receiving uiul uttering God.? Phillips Brooks. Straightforwardness. 1'e sure that straightforwardness is more than a match at last for all the involved windings of deceit la your daily life do what you feel right, say what you feel true, and leave, with faith and boldness, the consequences to God.?F. Robertson. IZave Christian Faith. Be a Christian, tbrow yourself upon God's Word, and get the ability you want in it. No Christian will ever be good for anything without Christian courage, or what is the same, Christian faith.?Horace BushuelL M IB GOVERNMENT LIGHT. HISTORIC CHICKAWIAUGA PARK ABLAZE WITH ILLUMINATION. United States System of Llglitlnflr M11Itnry 1'oBt Pronounced Gratifying^ Sncresiful?Six and One-Half Mllei ol Mains? Sixty-Five Street Lights. Chlckamauga Fark, Ga., May 31.?The United States Government has here in operation one of the largest acetylene gas plants In the worid. The military post at the entrance of the historical Cliickamauga oattlefield, where thirty thousand Union and Confederate soldiers were lost in the memorable battle of September 19 and 20, 1SG3, contains about one hundred buildings, the seventy-five principal ones of which are lighted with acetylene. To accomplish this six and one-half miles ol mains and two miles of service pipes are In use, while sixty-five street lamps brilliantly illuminate the avenues ol the post. In 1903 the War Department installed a test acetylene plant at Fori Meyer, Virginia. The results were so gratifying and the superiority of tht lllnmlnant so evident that the Govern' x r r 1. rtr\ iaai ?aati mem, .viurcii ~u, imjt, ijuitcu tuv wu tract for the Clilcknmauga plant, in which every citizen of the United States should have his pro rata uf pride. But the Government has not confined its acceptance of acetylene to this military post. Since becoming satisfied ol the efficiency, superiority and economleal advantages of this particular il luminant, the United States has installed a number of plants in Indiar schools and other Government lnsti tutions. Acetylene gr.s is one of the simplesl as well as the most perfect of artificial lights. It is made by the contact oi water and carbide (n manufactured product for sale at a nominal price), is absolutely safe and gives a beautiful white light soothing to the eyes anc nerves. It can be produced any when ?in the farm home, the village store ' *--*? xi.. .1 A,w1 ice town mm, xxie cuurcu?uuu ja easily maintained as to be practical foi nil classes. It is a matter for national congratu lation tliat in beautifying so historic n spot as Chickamauga. nothing but tlit best, including the lighting system, has been deemed good euongh for thf American people. Snved Jeflerpon'n Life. Joseph Jefferson, the actor, and General Sherman were great friends. Upon a certain occasion Jefferson called upon the General, says a writer Id Lippincott's. After a pleasant chal Jefferson rose to go, and General Slier man caught sight of a sheet of a papei under the chair where the actor haO been sitting. "Jefferson," he called, picking up the paper and carrying it to the door "you dropped this, I think." TnfTftrcrm tnnlf flip shept with an of fusion of thanks that was astonishing ? "My dear General," he exclaimed "you have saved my life!" "It seems to me you're- rather care less to carry such valuable papers around so loosely," replied the General in surprise. Jefferson laughed, and unfolding the pr.per revealed Its contents. It was the manuscript of the opening pages of the great actor's autobiography. Legend of the Ostrich. Among the Arabs there is a curious ' legend to account for the ostrich's resi denee in the desert. "On a certain daj appointed," so the story runs, "all ere atcd beings met together to decide upor I their respective order and precedence Al- went smoothly until the ostrich pleading its inability to fly, disownec tlie birds ana claimed to rase nunc win the mammals. These, however, woult have nothing to* say to a ereatun clothed not with fur, but with feathers wl.ile the birds, when the ostrich weni dejectedly back, repudiated it also as c traitor 1o its race. But the ostrict was equal to the occasion und declared that being neither mammal not blrc it must be an angel. At this all th( other animals indignantly rushed upoi the ostrich and drove it before then into the desert, where it has lived ir solitude ever since, with no one tc contradict it."?Chicago News. New Catch Fenny Machines. The latest penny-in-tlie-slot machine; In London represent a sort of savings bank. For each penny pushed in a re ceipt is returned, and sixty of these represent a five-shilling deposit in a bank. A ' DopewUm.1' Senator Depew recently gave utter a lice to Tills Durst OI piinusupiij; j.ue man who laughs is a doctor without a diploma. His face does more good in a sick room than a bushel of powders or a gallon of bitter draughts." FEED YOU MONEY Feed Your Brain, and It Will Feed \ou Money and Fame. "Ever since boyhood I. have been especially fond of meats, and I am convinced I ate too rapidiy, and failed to masticate my food properly. "Tlie result was that I found myself, n fev vears ago, afflicted with ailments of the stomach and kidneys, which interfered seriously with my business. "At last I took the advice of friends and began to eat Grape-Nuts instead of the heavv meats, etc., thai: had constituted my' former diet. "I found that I was at once benefited by the change, that 1 was soon relieved from the heart-burn and the indigestion that used to follow my nie-ils. that the pains in my back from my kidney affection had ceased, showing that those organs had been healed, and that my nerves, which used to be unsteady, and mi- hmin whipli was slow and lethargic J I ? ? from a heavy diet of meats and greasy foods, had, not in a moment, but gradually. and none the less surely, been restored to norma) efficiency. Now every nerve is steady and my brain and thinking faculties are quicker and more acute than for years past. "After my old style breakfasts I used to suffer during the forenoon from a feeling of Aveakness which hindered me seriously in my work, but 6ince 1 have begun to use Grape-Nuts food I can work till dinner time with all -ease and comfort." Name given by Posttini Co., Battle Creek. Mich. There')? a reason. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in each pkg. Be In Knrne?t. make the most of your opportunities. ^ Don't be satisfied that you'll do it to-morrow or rest on your laurels because you did it yesterday; do it today. Take advantage of every opportunity that comes your "way. Dou't got into the way of belittling your chances and feeling they are not big enough to bother over. > What seems the tiniest chance may > be the nucleus of the crooning achievement of your life. So you sec you can't r.fford to lot any opportunity slip for fear it might > be the right one. > Try and put energy and interest into > everything you do. ? Work with all your heart, play with , all your heart: above al! things avoid i indifference and that enemy to all ;l progress?apathy. ' Remember, life even at its longest is > brief, and there are thousands of i splendid, wonderful things to be j ' crowded into it. Try and economize these precious > fleeting moments by doing the things 1 : that's most worth while. > Select the pleasures that will bring > you greatest joy. Choose the work you j are most fitted to do. 1 Keep your eyes open; be alert; never i be afraid to try things. j > jcijirainaie i can i irom yuur vueau* ulary and put "I'll try" in Its place. ' I ? Northumberland's Women. I , The women in Northumberland, says | the English Country Life, lead healthy, open-air lives, and compare very favorably, both in morality and physique, with the factory hands, ill-paid semp- B stresses and domestic servants of the town. Without them it would not be t possible to carry on agricultural labor, n I because the rural exodus has to a very , serious extent diminished the avail- a | able supply of men. 4 g > The Deepest Haul, I Near the Tonga Islands; in the Pal ciflc, some time ago a fish net was sunk 1 ? 23,000 feet below the surface. That is , the deepest haul ever made. It took a $ > whole day to sink the net and raise it. h Life was found even at that depth, a over four miles, where the temperature j was just above freezing, and the pres- f; ? sure 9000 pounds to the square Inch. ? . j A Grateful Man. , There are few men so grateful as a St. Louis gentleman, who died there 3. * short time ago. In his will, after stat- ^ ing that he "never forgot a favor," he I left $1000 to au acquaintance who, ten c . years before, had eloped with the testa- a I tor's wife. ii t c A Petition Six Miles Lone. j 1 The colossal petition in support of the | bill for the prohibition of the vivi^ec: tion of dogs, read before Parliament for the first time on March 17, is re- I ported to be over six miles long, says c ! the London Chronicle. a Facts Are Stat J Uniform excellent quality fi century has steadily increased The leader of all Lion Coffee is now used in millions of homes. J popular success speaks for itself. It ' positive proof that LION COFFEE ha? Confidence of the peop] The uniform quality of LION i COFFEE survives all oppositio LION COFFEE keeps Its old friends makes new ones every day. i COFFEE has even * 1 than Its Strength, Flavor and Qi Ity, to commend it. On arrival fi the plantation, It Is carefully ro ed at our factories and secui packed in 1 lb. sealed packaj and not opened again until nee for use in the home. This preclu the possibility of adulteration < dust, insects or unclean hand , LION COFFEE is therefore guar; i Sold only in 1 lb. packages. I > Save these Lion-heads i SOLD BY GROCER! ^WIIM ; Pope Hartford? Modern Casoline Cai at Moderate Backed by 27 Years of Man I ^ M- ? I ^ 1?1 1^ u /% t 0 TO lon.r, i-isuc? Simple Construction, Li Address Dept. A For Ci Pope Manufai | l. HARTFORD blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, fou pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more ( starts chronic ailments and long years of sufferin CASCARETS today, for you will never get well right. Take our advicc, start with Caacarets ii money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped booklet free. * Adaref? Sterling Remedy Coapao I??aaaaH?HW? MISS MARIA DUCHARME. 'very woman in America is Inter* ested in This Young Girl's Experience. ipa** i ^mwj l^DilaiARME. (I' \JJi/ 152 Jt Elizabeths, ' ' ' ..^ontpeal.Caiv^ 'ELVIC CATARRH WAS DESTROYING HER LIFE. PE-RU-NA SAVED HER. Miss Maria Ducharme, 18*2 St. Elizabeth treet, Montreal, Can., writes: "I am satisfied that thousands of women uffer because they do not realize how bad hey really peed treatment and feel a atural delicacy in consulting a physician. "I felt badly fo'r y?ars, had terrible pains, nd at times was unable to attend to my aily duties. I tried to cure myself, but nally my attention was caused to an adertisement of Peruna in a similar case to nine, and I decided to give it a trial. "My improvement began as soon as ' started to use Peruna and soon I vas a well woman. I feel that I owe <iy life and my health to your wonterful medicine and gratefully acknowledge this fact."?Maria Duch,rme. ? > 1 fl_ TT L T> : J A TU. -.luuress ur. xianiuau, ncsiucuv ui xuc Iartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for ree medical advice. All correspondence strictly confidential. New Way of Stealing* A new way of stealing even large . tales and boxes when cargo is sent to rienstin by rail, says the Hong-Kong *ost, has been discovered. One end if a strong rope Is tied around a tree tnd the other end, to which an anchor , s attached, is thrown among the things in an open truck as it passes, to take ts chances at a haul. .-J Shop Opened With Tea. A "hat shop" was opened in London, Eng., by the Countess Fabricotti, re entiy. ijiveriea iooimen auuueu round tea and cakes. (born Things or over a quarter of a the sales of LION COITEE, package coffees. :des "" I >r contact with germs, dirt* I 5. The absolute purity of I anteed to the consumer. | ^on-head on every package. || for valuable premiums. Ig 5 EVERYWHERE ? )LSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Pope Tribune rs and Runabouts 5 Prices. ufacturins Experience. >, $500 to $1600 jxurious Equipment. implete Catalogues. cturing Co., , CONN. RTBOWELS # LMh CATHARTIS appendicitis, liliousness, bad breath, bad 1 mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, dizziness. When your bowels don't mova jeople than all other diseases together. It g, No matter what ails youT start tricing and stay well until you get your lxjwela jday under absolute guarantee to cure or C CC. Never sold is bulk* Scmplc and p, Chicago or New Vork. 503